Profits dip at DB

Revenue and profits is down at DB, but its owners enjoyed a doubling in dividend payout. Photo / Michael Craig

Local brewing giant DB Breweries saw its revenue and profit dip last year, but that didn't stop the firm from more than doubling the dividend it paid to its Singaporean parent company.

Otahuhu-based DB, New Zealand's second-biggest brewer after Lion, posted total sales of $465.7 million for the 12 months to September 30, 2012, down from $481.5 million a year earlier, according to its latest set of financial statements lodged with the Companies Office.

DB's profit fell 2 per cent on the previous year to $26.2 million.

The company paid a dividend of $33.7 million to its owner, Singapore-based Asia Pacific Breweries, up from the $15 million dividend it declared in the previous year.

The brewer's advertising and marketing costs fell to $28 million from $32.9 million a year earlier, while staff costs rose slightly to $55.8 million.

DB's arch-nemesis, Lion, also posted a drop in revenue for the same period, according to its financial statements that were filed in March.

The Newmarket-based company's total sales fell to $613.2 million from $635.1 million in 2011, while profit rose to $67.8 million from $52.3 million in the previous year.

Both companies are having to deal with a market in which beer consumption is falling.

The total volume of beer available for consumption in this country dropped 6.6 per cent to 280 million litres in 2012.

And while beer accounted for 81 per cent of total alcoholic beverage consumption in 1996, the proportion had slumped to 61 per cent by last year, according to Statistics New Zealand.